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While Michael has worked in libraries in circulation, cataloging, interlibrary loans and other areas, he focuses on technology in his current job.  His work includes providing IT support for staff, ...
Earth lives in a shooting gallery, with small and large rocky bodies in abundance in our solar system. Are we in danger of ...
For 36 years the words of journalist Tom Ross filled the pages of the Steamboat Pilot & Today weekly and daily newspapers, ...
Travel lists used to be the province of old-school, ad-stuffed glossy publications like Travel + Leisure and Condé Nast ...
Plants face simultaneous abiotic (drought, salinity, heat) and biotic (pathogens, pests) stresses in natural and agricultural ...
A Moratorium on AI Regulation is Madness from The Hill informs us that the “big beautiful bill” before the US Senate contains a “10-year moratorium prohibiting state regulation of artificial ...
Tucked away in Columbus’s historic German Village sits a literary wonderland so vast and enchanting that bookworms regularly make pilgrimages from every corner of Ohio – The Book Loft spans an ...
It's a regrettable reality that there is never enough time to cover all the interesting scientific stories we come across each month. In the past, we've featured year-end roundups of cool science ...
Science does not just happen in labs or academic journals. It shapes our health, our economy, our security and our way of ...
Scientists in the United States tend to avoid activism; many fear that wading into politics will undermine their work and compromise their independence. Others worry that engaging in protest or ...
To varying degrees, medical journals have attempted to mitigate the effects of this problem. An earlier editor-in-chief of the NEJM, Arnold S. Relman, blazed a path in 1984 when he instituted a ...